Litcius/Paper detail

The global distribution of plants used by humans

Samuel Pironon, Ian Ondo, Mauricio Diazgranados, Robert Allkinꝉ, Andrea C. Baquero, Rodrigo Cámara‐Leret, Cátia Canteiro, Zoe Dennehy-Carr, Rafaël Govaerts, Serene Hargreaves, Alex Hudson, Roel Lemmens, William Milliken, Mark Nesbitt, Kristina Patmore, G. H. Schmelzer, Robert M. Turner, Tinde van Andel, Tiziana Ulian, Alexandre Antonelli, Katherine J. Willis

2024Science118 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Plants sustain human life. Understanding geographic patterns of the diversity of species used by people is thus essential for the sustainable management of plant resources. Here, we investigate the global distribution of 35,687 utilized plant species spanning 10 use categories (e.g., food, medicine, material). Our findings indicate general concordance between utilized and total plant diversity, supporting the potential for simultaneously conserving species diversity and its contributions to people. Although Indigenous lands across Mesoamerica, the Horn of Africa, and Southern Asia harbor a disproportionate diversity of utilized plants, the incidence of protected areas is negatively correlated with utilized species richness. Finding mechanisms to preserve areas containing concentrations of utilized plants and traditional knowledge must become a priority for the implementation of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.

Topics & Concepts

Species richnessBiodiversityIndigenousGeographyDistribution (mathematics)Diversity (politics)EcologyAgroforestryPlant speciesTraditional knowledgeEnvironmental resource managementBiologyEnvironmental sciencePolitical scienceMathematicsMathematical analysisLawEthnobotanical and Medicinal Plants StudiesPrimate Behavior and EcologySpecies Distribution and Climate Change